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September 02, 2006

Of Artists and Entrepreneurs

I had lunch with a friend today who, like me, went through the art school mill and now teaches at a university. He came to talk about a business idea that he had been working on. We noted that business in general and entrepreneurship in particular were variously ignored, frowned upon, or downright despised in contemporary art circles. Of course this is complete bullshit. Art itself is a business - one with it''s own peculiar and quite elitist economy - and artists spend a good deal of time pretending that it is not a business.

brewery los angeles dean terryThe denial is wrapped up in the whole mentality of being a modern or contemporary artist. Get your MFA, work some crap gig, and live in a dirty, dangerous urban environment, preferably an industrial park. I did it for a year or so in the early 1990's in downtown Los Angeles and then discovered the beautiful canyons of Sierra Madre. It didn't take much to burn down that mythological house. Living in squalor did not give me the warm fuzzies. I had enough grime, chaos, and noise in my own head and didn't need the inner city to make me feel "authentic"or "connected."

Early on, I too had the view of business that it was just evil, pointless, greed driven piggishness - and sure, much of it is. During the 1990's when I ran a serious of businesses I often had the feeling of my soul draining to the floor as I sat in a meeting, a visceral feel of time slipping by in the wake of crushing meaninglesness. But at least I could sit down while my soul drained away. At art openings they make you stand up.

But as with so many things, I hated what I didn't understand.

What I learned is that the same processes involved in "creating" in the fine arts are present everywhere in society, including and most especially in entrepreneurship. Many of the fine artists I have known are totally spineless. They are beholden to a power structure - critics, curators, collectors (the 3 C's) - that they rarely question. The fakery is no less thick than the most tasteless marketing pitch from a mattress company. The difference is that business lies right to your face while art pretends it isn't lying.

I'm completely devoted to the creative life, but I have learned not to restrict it out of ignorance to things traditionally labeled "the arts." It's everywhere. That feeling of wanting to create something new is the same whether it's a film, a recording, a virtual island, or a start-up. You just begin with different constraints, established methods, and expectations.

After being burnt out from the dot-com era, over the past year I've been feeling more and more like there may be another run to make. Creating a business requires you to bounce your ideas against the unbending nature of physical reality. Of practical, economic reality. It requires you to use the materials of real time, real people, and to create something that works in the face of enormous uncertainties. This is especially true in technology where the ground is shifting beneath you constantly. It is exactly like studying metaphysics, or painting.

descartesHopefully a lot of the way people in the arts view entrepreneurship will change. There are signs. The fact that you can build your own network and market yourself with various Internet strategies is a major change. It's an unstable and evolving scenario, but the "long tail" effect is a real one, and the opportunities for a significant level of creative independence for artists with a strong, personal , authentic voice are promising.

Yes, it's easier to give your cultural product to "the man" - music label, gallery, publisher, etc. - and then let them market and distribute while you stay completely in the dark about the process. But the ability to control the entire enterprise is much more empowering, interesting, and liberating. The whole idea about "marketing yourself" changes from fake cheek kiss networking with those who would present you to the world to using distributed networks on the web to connect directly to an audience.

My friend thought up a way to make money from the backwardness of the art system. I wish him the best in his entrepreneurial and yes, creative endeavor.

 

Posted by Dean Terry at September 2, 2006 10:37 PM
Feedback

This is all very interesting. The internet has changed everything and I dont think it has been tapped thoroughly yet. My website (and making connections thru blogs and such) has proven to be an incredible way to market. Now I think the word "market" does not necessarily mean money. But just getting the work seen and discussed, getting opportunities to show-all that. I notice something also happening among my fellow young art professors which I think has a lot to do with Miami Art Basel. In December right before the end of the semester we all go there and are amazed and wonder "How do I get in this action?" (an actual quote I have heard)The traditional view (and cause of the "ivory tower") is that we must keep our work pure, not compromise to make a living, we make a living thru teaching and then get to do whatever kind of art we want. right? well, what happens to that idea when you go to these art fairs and see stuff as crazy and out-there as yours, seemingly unsellable, SELL for THOUSANDS? It demolishes that idea out of the water.

Posted by: onesock at September 5, 2006 12:06 PM

 

 

 

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